Nice! Great way to take advantage of a deserted Tuolumne...(ha ha...like you two ever need to worry about lines!).

Yep, there's plenty of old bolts still left - although there wouldn't be if Roger hadn't moved down to the Valley a few years ago. But he's back in Tuolumne, so 200+ old bolts are gone this season! Tony & Clint & a few others get plenty done too (and fix lines for Roger!).

Joe & I did Birthday Party (left of Goblin Girl) and that one has a rusty fixed pin driven up under a headwall at the first belay (or maybe 2nd original belay), backed up with not-so-awesome 1" cams. I "backed up" the belay with an OK micronut...blech. Almost rather hang on those 3 nasty 1/4" bolts...almost.

Birthday party either needs a hammer plus some larger pitons, or maybe small tricams, or (in my best guess) a bolt right where the current piton is. No alternate belay spots either, runout below and above. The 5.7 slab up top is no joke, steep clean slab off a ledge/ramp, 40+ feet, no pro. Luckily not much lichen (compared to most rock up there that is).

Greg,
Clint sent me the list of climbs needing replacement so I know if we get on something to bring ropes for replacement. I didn't have it when we climbed these or I would have brought and set a rope for replacement because some of these are hard for Roger and Clint to get to. Another one Jay and I did was "Booty and the Beach" on Lembert that needs replacing but will be hard to do because the route traverses so much. Maybe Jay can post some photo's of that as well. Scary belay off huge loose blocks at end of first pitch. Jay and I talked about rap anchors for Green Goblin wall but I would ask FA if OK cause the route goes to top and there is good gear anchors. But on Booty and the Beach, there really should be some belay anchors installed at top of pitch one. The reason I bring it up here is that it's a good place to ask FA parties about routes.

Edit: We did find the two new bolts on South Crack. Jay and I have climbed that many times and never found them so we were determined. Wandered around and there they were.....

Awesome stuff! Really good TR first day i ever climbed in tuolumne we did south crack & tried to simul climb it in 1 pitch on a 30m rope, it was an incredible climb but we had a bit of a moment lost on the slabs when there were no bolts between us cuz I could seem to find any more on the 30m, eventually we figured it out & didnt die but it was memorable, thanks for the reminder. Seems you could climb almost anywhere up there.

Here's a bit of history on Black Bart and the first ascent that Roger Breedlove wrote about on the "museum climbs" thread from 2007.

"Hey, Bob J., up-thread, you talked about 'Black Bart' on DAFF and the difference in bolt protection on the first pitch and the upper, crux pitch, and your conversation with Ron about adding a bolt on the first pitch to avoid a grounder—if I read you comments correctly.

The route was started by TM and me. I led the first pitch and placed the bolt that you mentioned. My lead was to come in from the right, starting near the rope-up spot for the "Crescent Arch", and then move horizontally to the base of the thin crack that completes the first pitch. There were a lot of loose micro flakes on that traverse and I was skating around and pulling off stuff to find secure holds. I started getting nervous about peeling, and asked TM what he thought about me dinking in a bolt. He begged off an opinion and said I should do what ever I thought was right. We didn’t place bolts willy-nilly, but I put one in, moved over to the crack and finished the pitch.

TM and I were guides at the climbing school and whatever reason we bailed on at the top of the first pitch. When we returned with Ron as our rope gun—I think it was the next year , TM led the first pitch and I followed. As TM was belaying up Ron, I un-roped and took a peek at the next pitch around the corner. When I came back, I didn't tie back in, but stood on one foot on a giant knob chatting with TM.

Mid sentence the whole knob broke off, and I was in the air. I lunged for TM's tie in rope and just managed to get my fingers from one hand on the loop of rope. Just as I reached full extension and had started pulling TM out of his position, he braced himself, and, using his Black Belt speed, slapped his hand on top of my wrist like some sort of sprung trap and caught me, fully extended, legs a-dangling. A one-handed catch.

I was pretty shaken up at my willful disregard for the nature of the mountains to kill off interlopers. So, when Ron got up to the belay, we rapped off. I started back to college that fall, and Ron and TM returned later and finished the route.

I am not sure that I have a valid opinion about the bolt I placed on the first pitch since I didn't finish the route. It might be that folks now reach that crack from a different angle and a ground fall is more likely. I would consult Ron and TM.

I did however have an opportunity this past year to consider the issue of adding a bolt to a not crux pitch on another route in the Meadows (see Ed's thread on 'Peter Peter'). Part of what happens naturally on first ascents is that you don't know what you are getting into or what level of commitment and climbing standard has to be sustained. It is really easy to under-protect the easier parts of a climb as compared to the crux, with the perverse effect that easier pitches are dangerous and the crux pitch is sewed up. I was mostly lazy and for all the times that I told myself that I would go back and fix up a route--add a more logical start or finish, or rearrange the bolt protection or belays, I only recall doing it once, in the Valley. All the other times, I just let it slide. On some ascents, when we were putting more forethought into it, we took the time to fix the issues on the first ascent.

Great find Bob. And that's why (I think I have enough of these slabs climbs under my belt on lead and on FA to comment with some humble input) that to onsite some of them without a bolt kit is just as hard as the FA. True, you don't have to drill, but you don't have a drill so the mental task before you is stiff. True, you think bolts are there because of the topo but topo's aren't always accurate (there's a pin at the top of the crack not shown on the topo for Black Bart at the spot marked 10a for instance) and can "lead you on" into danger. Jay climbed great on that pitch not knowing where the start was and not seeing bolts until he was there. You also want a strong partner because of the nature of some of the traverses on the slabs. Just as hard sometimes to un-clip and go looking at a bad fall. I'm not one to advocate adding to someone's vision and experience and it's why I love these climbs from that era but also respect the wishes of the FA. They are a reflection of the times and people who shaped them. And it's why I'm doing my small part to preserve them.

Edit: Bob. Just read your comments on the museum thread. All good. I climb over the old bolts onsite before replacement so I don't "review" the climb because it is all about trying to get the experience and the "feel" of the first ascent, and as I say above, I think it's sometimes scarier. As to climbers of today (Largo posted this thought wondering whether or not climbers will come back to them if re-bolted)coming back to them after re-bolting it depends. Climbers followed us up Curve Like Her as we were rebolting! They'd always wanted to do it but not on bad bolt's. Conversely, I can't think of a scarier undertaking then onsiting Burning Down the House, not knowing where that lone bolt is at the crux.

Haha - we were down at the beach wondering who those two guys were that seemed lost on South Crack - just wandering around, then "Hey I think the second is starting to simul now" and this was on the first slab pitch. Found out that night around the campfire it was Jay and Tony :D

Yeah that smoke crept in Fri afternoon and stayed through Sat - but wasn't all that bad. Looked like fog!

It did keep the crowds at bay and the following weekend I got to finally get on Fairview and lead my sis up the Regular Route - arrived at 9:30 with no lines, 3 other parties all day.

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